֭

Table of Contents

Heckler’s veto at the turnstiles

Birmingham police ban Maccabi Tel Aviv fans from Europa League soccer match
Maccabi Tel Aviv football club fans

HakanGider / Shutterstock.com

Last week, authorities in England  fans of Israeli soccer team Maccabi Tel Aviv from attending the team’s November 6 match against Aston Villa in Birmingham, calling the event “high risk.”

The ban comes on the heels of a terror attack on Jews attending Yom Kippur services about 90 miles north in Manchester. Birmingham police  for their decision, ostensibly anticipating a repeat of last year’s violence between Maccabi fans, Ajax Amsterdam fans, and protestors before a match in Holland. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer  the recommendation was “the wrong decision” — and local authorities should listen.

Security concerns must never become a cudgel for viewpoint discrimination. By excluding only Maccabi fans, Birmingham authorities effectively granted critics of the team, or its home nation, a heckler’s veto. But police should focus on those who cause violence, not their intended victims. Banning a group only hands intimidators exactly what they want.

As Nico Perrino, executive vice president at ֭, explained in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination:

Moving forward, we can expect colleges and universities to place even greater emphasis on security ahead of controversial speakers arriving on campus. But administrators must not pass security costs along to speakers or use security concerns as pretext to cancel a speaker’s appearance. They have a moral and legal obligation to redouble their efforts to protect free speech. Rewarding threats of violence by taxing speech or silencing speakers will only invite more threats and more violence.

The UK may not have a First Amendment, but it does risk violating the European Convention on Human Rights, a post-World War II pact designed to prevent exactly this kind of overreach. Article 5 of the  protects “liberty and security,” while Articles 10 and 11 of the ECHR protect freedom of speech, assembly, and association. Generally, when security risks threaten these rights, police must take the “least restrictive means” to ensure safety (). 

In the soccer context, the ECHR allows “drastic” steps only where there’s a “pressing social need.” (). In other words, European courts expect targeted responses to violent threats: police should “only detain those … identified as a risk to public safety.” (). Similar to the United States’ Brandenburg standard, British police cannot use “premature and indiscriminate” measures against an entire group’s right to associate when a breach of the peace is not imminent. (). 

These decisions support highly individualized action when soccer fans threaten violence at matches. If the means chosen is instead to empty the entire away end, that looks less like security and more like collective punishment, which chills speech and association.

The imperative of freedom demands precision when it comes to threats and violence.

This is about more than a single soccer match. Last month, for example, police  comedian Graham Linehan at Heathrow Airport for posts on social media about transgender issues (London’s Metropolitan Police has since  it will stop investigating “non-crime hate incidents,” and no charges followed Linehan’s arrest). And as FIREsenior fellow Jacob Mchangama wrote, “more than  were being arrested for various online offenses” in England last April.

Across the UK, police continue to crack down on pro-Palestinian protests in recent months. Police have  over 2,000 protesters demonstrating against the ban on the pro-Palestine organizing group Palestine Action, while police  a woman in Kent for posting a “free Gaza” sign. The London Metropolitan Police even  pro-Palestine protests amid “public safety” concerns — the same rationale Birmingham authorities cite here. These examples make it clear that government imprecision in response to threatened violence knows no ideological bounds.

Just as the UK government should not shut down pro-Palestinian protests, the answer here cannot be to sideline Israeli fans from public life. Keeping people safe from violence is a core role of government. But the imperative of freedom demands precision when it comes to threats and violence. The Birmingham police should reverse this decision and protect supporters and protestors alike when Maccabi Tel Aviv takes to the pitch in Birmingham on November 6.

Recent Articles

Get the latest free speech news and analysis from ֭.

Share